During the war I was evacuated to the country and I used to go and get Mulberries from the Mulberry bush so that I could feed my younger brother and sister and myself. And I just remember that feeling of reaching the sky and the fields and the bush, the Mulberry bush. I was alone and just picking. It is getting a bit cold, though the sky is still blue because the sun is going down behind the mountains. And I was feeling a bit frightened because they said there were many ghosts in the field and I was a little girl and had to go back home all by myself. It's getting dark... So this is how I did the Mulberry song....
From the album Blueprint for a Sunrise.
Vocals - Yoko Ono
Guitars - Timo Ellis, Sean Lennon, Chris Maxwell
Keyboards - Sean Lennon
Bass - Timo Ellis, Erik Sanko
Percussion - Hearn Gadbois, Sam Koppelman
Drums - Timo Ellis, Phil Hernandez, Sam Koppelman

Ahahaha! An offhand comment from the offland maybes? Music is just another audible wave propagated in air. If its art or not is totally up to the person listening to it - its not for you to state it on everyones behalf is it? (...or do you think your simply expressed opinion is that important [?honest shrug?] )
The internet is full of commentards acting as the self-elected spokespeople on taste or what constitutes 'art' - when most of them are far to bland or reactionary to have even an inkling as to the irony of the words they leave on the WWW. Ms Ono, for the record, has the reputation she does precisely BECAUSE she's prepared to experiment and push some boundaries as to what music is and does. Like it or dislike it, comment or not, but at least *try* to drag a justification above the level of 'I instinctively don't like this so I'm going to register my dull unimportant and unexplained opinion it for posterity'. Apart from the irritation factor, surely no-one cares if that's all you have to share? The track isn't something I'm going to pop on the hifi whilst I cook or have some mates over for a chat - but at least its *interesting*, 100% more so than what you had to say about it.
Long live diversity and those willing to push the envelope.